Until recently, the prevailing view assumed lorem ipsum was born as a nonsense text. โItโs not Latin, though it looks like it, and it actually says nothing,โ Before & After magazine answered a curious reader, โIts โwordsโ loosely approximate the frequency with which letters occur in English, which is why at a glance it looks pretty real.โ
As Cicero would put it, โUm, not so fast.โ
The placeholder text, beginning with the line โLorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elitโ, looks like Latin because in its youth, centuries ago, it was Latin.
Richard McClintock, a Latin scholar from Hampden-Sydney College, is creditedwith discovering the source behind the ubiquitous filler text. In seeing a sample of lorem ipsum, his interest was piqued by consecteturโa genuine, albeit rare, Latin word. Consulting a Latin dictionary led McClintock to a passage from De Finibus Bonorum et Malorum (โOn the Extremes of Good and Evilโ), a first-century B.C. text from the Roman philosopher Cicero.
In particular, the garbled words of lorem ipsum bear an unmistakable resemblance to sections 1.10.32โ33 of Ciceroโs work, with the most notable passage excerpted below:
Until recently, the prevailing view assumed lorem ipsum was born as a nonsense text. โItโs not Latin, though it looks like it, and it actually says nothing,โ Before & After magazine answered a curious reader, โIts โwordsโ loosely approximate the frequency with which letters occur in English, which is why at a glance it looks pretty real.โ
As Cicero would put it, โUm, not so fast.โ
The placeholder text, beginning with the line โLorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elitโ, looks like Latin because in its youth, centuries ago, it was Latin.
Richard McClintock, a Latin scholar from Hampden-Sydney College, is creditedwith discovering the source behind the ubiquitous filler text. In seeing a sample of lorem ipsum, his interest was piqued by consecteturโa genuine, albeit rare, Latin word. Consulting a Latin dictionary led McClintock to a passage from De Finibus Bonorum et Malorum (โOn the Extremes of Good and Evilโ), a first-century B.C. text from the Roman philosopher Cicero.
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